i don't like at all silver. very dull looking color it doesn't pop or catch my attention nowadays, we only see greys&silver. where i work they are 7 grey/silver car for 10 employees.. but, until i saw a nice clean ss. silver ice with black stripes... WOW i must admit i found it very nice looking better than the cyber gray --very flat color--you could see all the muscle lines on the car especially the middle door to the rear and the wide rear fender.. the silver ice was like ice! very reflective--like wet-- it was matching the grey sky that day. so now i enjoy to see a little more the silver ice camaro's.

...and, Hurst, when you look at the SIM in different light, it almost looks like it changes shades of silver/grey. I love looking at this car with or without stripes. Your right about the lines of the car. It looks raw and kinda dull but pops once your really looking at it!!

...and, Hurst, when you look at the SIM in different light, it almost looks like it changes shades of silver/grey. I love looking at this car with or without stripes. Your right about the lines of the car. It looks raw and kinda dull but pops once your really looking at it!!

The car will pull the colors from everever it sits i have even seen my car pink,blue white orange its very reflextive and when the fireswere here in LA h the clouds were pink andso was the car you get the drift...

I have quite a few rock chips on the front of mine and will be going in for paint in the spring.

Wish I really new the reasion for wet sanding but I think its for the new paint to seal and stick also he will be spraying 2 coats of clear over the wet sanding area at it will look better than new.And of course he had to repair the damage i recived after two weeks of getting the car hitting crap on the 57 freeway!!

You have to sand the clear coat down to get to the paint. It's a fine sandpaper and you do it wet so the clear and paint will just flow off the car. You have to rough up the paint so the new will adhere to the car. Then they'll wet sand each coat with an even finer sandpaper to bring out an awesome shine. Finally shoot it with the clear coat.

I'm no painter, but I've got a buddy that does this for a living. I'm sure there is more of a technical explanation but he just summed it up for me.